The general in charge of America's nukes says North Korea tests weapons faster than the US does

The
head of US STRATCOM, the branch of the military that oversees the
US's strategic nuclear forces, spoke frankly about the problems
in the military's acquisition strategy and lamented that he could
not run the program as Kim Jong Un runs North Korea's nuclear
program.

"If you've been in the acquisition business at all over the
last 20 years, you realize we already have a broken program. We
just don't know where," Air Force Gen. John Hyten said at a
recent conference, according to National Defense Magazine.
"Because nothing in the acquisition business ever delivers
exactly on time [and] exactly on budget anymore."

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The Pentagon faces a major feat of recapitalization in the
upcoming years where each leg of the US's nuclear triad will need
updating. Analysts predict that the programs will total $1
trillion in costs and continue through the 2030s, in part due to
a bloated acquisition system.

Hyten said that between 1959 and 1964 the US spent $17
billion in today's dollars on putting 800 Minuteman
intercontinental ballistic missiles around the country. Today,
the plan is to spend $84 billion on 400 missiles that won't come
online until 2035.

At one point, Hyten railed against the overly cautious,
slow approach the US takes to nuclear modernization, saying that
the US takes too long because they expect every test to work.

caption

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un supervised a ballistic rocket launching drill of Hwasong artillery units of the Strategic Force of the KPA on the spot

source

Thomson Reuters

"Look at Kim Jong Un," said Hyten. "What he's doing is
testing and failing, testing and failing, testing and failing,
testing and succeeding. … He's learned how to go fast."

While the US has the world's best nuclear arsenal, and
North Korea has the worst, the Kim regime has put forth an
impressively quick schedule of testing. Throughout April and May,
North Korea tested a new missile nearly every week.

"This is the United States of America. We have the greatest
minds, the best and brightest," Hyten said. The Pentagon just
needs to "get back to the basics."